So... If the heat caused the co2, then the co2 created more heat, what prevented the new heat from forming new co2 and the whole thing spiraling out of control? Hmm?
Heat doesn't "form" CO2. It contributes to a positive feedback loop, which is eventually exhausted when there aren't more CH
4, CO
2 or other such gases in concentrations greater than those that are already present in the atmosphere. Consider the atmosphere a solution, where it is difficult to move past the saturation point. Eventually, over time the CH
4 gets hydrated and locked up, along with CO
2 (mostly in the deep oceans) and things come back down.
And the whole thing has spiraled out of control before. The only problem is that we can determine isotopic ratios of
12C and
13C in the atmosphere that only occur during the burning of oil and coal. There isn't another source for them, and they've been accumulating in the atmosphere 9 times faster than at any other point in the past 5 million years or so. These isotopes
only form when fossil fuels are burned, this is how we can decode that the forcing is primarily being accumulated by our industrialization.